First, the order of doing the questions is very important.
"Line test", that is, administrative ability test, is to examine candidates' knowledge reserve and ability to deal with problems quickly. This exam pays equal attention to speed and accuracy. Without accuracy, it is meaningless, and speed without accuracy is meaningless. Moreover, the difference between the civil service exam and other exams is that the score of each question is different, and even the same question has different scores. According to Tu Hua's many years' experience in civil service counseling, the types of questions with heavier scores in civil service examination are: speech comprehension, data analysis, logical judgment, definition judgment and graphic reasoning; Lighter scores: analogical reasoning, mathematical operation and common sense judgment. Although it will be slightly adjusted according to the difficulty of the topic every year, the weight has not changed much. Therefore, in order to get high marks, it is very important to arrange the order of doing the questions reasonably. Candidates are advised to pay attention to "good beginning and good end". The so-called "a good start" is to start doing the questions that you are most sure of. First, to prevent the test confidence from being affected by difficult problems at the beginning, and at the same time to give their thoughts a process of adaptation and adjustment. A good ending is to put the topics you are not good at last, even if you don't do it, it's not a pity. Candidates in other modules can do it in the order of high and low scores.
Second, pay attention to trade-offs
The average examination time of "line test" in Henan Province 120 minutes, 130 questions. Excluding the time of marking cards, a question takes less than one minute on average, which means that it is inevitable that the questions will not be finished. Many students are easy to walk into a dead end in the process of doing problems. When faced with a problem that seems familiar but can't find a solution at the moment, the examinee's psychological state is: this type of problem is generally done, it's a pity not to do it, and the result will come out after thinking about it again. When he found that he had never found the answer, his time had been ruthlessly squandered. If you can't get the answer within the average time value, you should give up actively and transfer your position to ensure that you have time to do the problem later. It is also the experience of many candidates who have successfully entered the civil service position to spend their energy on topics worth doing and guess the remaining 20 to 30 topics that they think are the most difficult.
Third, make full use of debris time.
In the examination room, invigilators usually hand out papers a few minutes in advance, asking candidates to fill in their test numbers and names, and stressing that they are not allowed to write answers. As far as "walking test" is concerned, time is the score. During this period, candidates can make full use of it, such as looking at common sense judgment, analogical reasoning and other topics in advance, or looking at the stem of the previous topic in advance. As long as they don't write, invigilators generally don't interfere. When the answer bell rings, write the answer quickly.
Never send a card with a stamp in the last five minutes.
Many candidates only leave themselves five minutes to score cards in order to finish all the exam questions. Because they usually don't practice what is related to the marking card, and because they are too nervous, they can't finish the answer to the question 130 in five minutes. What's more, a terrible thing happened last year. One candidate left himself six minutes to remember the cards. What is hateful is that the watch in the examination room is three minutes slow, that is, it is actually only three minutes. Although such incidents rarely occur, and the invigilator also has considerable responsibilities, it is of no help to investigate who is responsible at this time, and only tears can be shed in the examination room.